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Synopsis Wild with longings she can't explain, Frankie acts crazy when her brother gets married. 'Two's company and three is a crowd. That's the main thing about a wedding.' Berenice says to Frankie. Set in 1945 in the American South, this is t he story of the bond between Frankie, the adolescent dreamer, and Sadie Berenice Brown, the cook who mothers the motherless girl. It has as its backdrop the end of an era, before civil rights. In these three months of Summer into Fall, Frankie is growing up, but the world is also changing for Berenice. Age 12 and over Run time 150 mins. The Member of the Wedding is supported by Thomson and The Genesis Foundation Main Theatre
There is no question that you feel you are watching a great play as Carson McCullers’ The Member of the Wedding unravels, rather slowly, on the wide acres of the Young Vic stage. The problem with Matthew Dunster’s unevenly acted and overly leisurely production is that it’s not always easy to follow exactly what is going on, or what exactly is being said.
Basically, the play is a study in the adolescence of a 12-year-old tomboyish American girl, Frankie Addams, in a Southern back yard and kitchen in the summer of 1945. The war seems a long way away, and is coming to an end. Frankie’s older brother is getting married and Frankie wants to be a “member” of his wedding party; she’s too young.
This disappointment is the flash point of her mounting frustration and sense of alienation. Frankie’s mother is long dead and her father is an irritable fusspot. Her friends are starting to go out with boys.
Her only refuge is the kitchen and the wise counselling of the family cook, Berenice Sadie Brown, whose own family troubles indicate a seething unrest in the black community outside. She also has a little seven-year-old cousin, John Henry West, who’s a willing accomplice in her fantasies and play acting in the arbour.
Adapted by Carson McCullers from her own novel, the play has an unusual richness but seems remote from our experience. Frankie’s sustained adolescent strop presents an enormous challenge to a young actress (Julie Harris made her name in the role on Broadway in 1950) that newcomer Flora Spencer-Longhurst, a graduate of the National Youth Music Theatre, doesn’t quite meet. She gets the dirty elbows and dirty feet of the role but shades monotonously into shrieking when vexed.
The play is powered by the single-named American actress Portia as Berenice, who conveys a wealth of experience and gravity in her ministrations and soul chanting. There’s a nice cameo from Alibe Parsons as the itinerant vegetable lady, and Berenice’s own world erupts on the white man’s porch when her volatile son Honey Camden Brown (John Macmillan) calls by like a whirling dervish.
The series of tragic revelations belong more to the page than the stage in their execution. And the climactic thunder storm seems more of a device than an inevitable disruption of the wedding party. The production suffers, too, from a too long first half (the first two acts) being brutally wrapped up in the short third act. Robert Innes Scott’s huge design is set on an unsettling angle to the audience, resulting in an intermittent lack of focus.
Yes, the play isn't that great. Yes, some of the accents can be a bit hard to decipher.
But go now.
The main performances are outstanding, and that from Portia, playing the black maid is the best acting I've seen this year. The staging is also excellent, and makes for one of the most moving pieces of theatre I've ever seen. - addicted to theatre
08 Oct 07
Saw this production this evening. WOW what a blast! I was blown away. I saw the production for free becuase I am studying at a drama school and i thought it was going to be some low-key drab production but i was shocked as soon as i walked into the auditorium. The set was magnificant and as soon as the play began i knew i was in for a treat.
The play actually began to remind a bit of "Caroline, or Chnage" which i saw at the National last year, which was also fantastic. What can I say, the deep south just provides fantastic drama for playwrights. - P.R
02 Oct 07
Great design, good acting all round - yes Flora Spencer-Longhurst is very good although the character started to grate on me during the second half; I felt that some Frankie's transformations, so vivid in the novel, were somewhat lost, and her inconsolable despair when she doesn't get what she yearns for was drained of depth and came across as a mere tantrum. But these gripes were outweighed by the good stuff, including a beautifully realised thunderstorm and a couple of moments of real humid tension. Portia's peformance as Berenice is a standout. - Sycamore Flint
27 Sep 07
Oops - now I'm inept too, and lost one my stars. - Mikey
21 Sep 07
Michael Coveney was not in the least venerable with his inempt chairing of an Old Vic Q&A this week, and over at the Young Vic he must have been having a bad chair day too. This highly collectable play contains three not-to-be missed performances which easily warrant 4 stars. Go, before you miss a straight-play highlight of the year. - Mikey
21 Sep 07
I never give more than four stars, but Flora Spencer-Longhurst's vigourous performance earns the extra one here. The excellent supporting cast are a great scaffold, from which she shines in the role of a child so full of life and questions that she'd diagnosed ADHD and dosed to the eyeballs with ritalin in today's UK. - Gus W
18 Sep 07
I really enjoyed this show. Saw it in an early preview thanks to an eagle eyed friend. The relationships and reactions of the actors were quite beautiful. The young girl frankie was quite clearly on the verge of adulthood - desperate to get away from her childhood to the seemingly exciting world of adulthood. Who can't relate to that! Maybe it didn't say anything new about the world but what a wonderful evening - i was transported and all the more so because of Robert Innes-Hopkins (a little bit of name checking wouldn't hurt before writing your piece) ddetailed set. - Martin Johnson
17 Sep 07
The venerable Michael Coveney is way wide of the mark in his review. This was quite simply one of the most powerful and moving performances I've seen at the Young Vic or anywhere else.
Flora Spencer-Longhurst nails the mannerisms and emotional volatility of an early teen and the little bloke playing her cousin - in what turns out to be a key role - is destined for quite a future if this performance is anything to go by.
The two of them interact wonderfully with the world-weary maid, played to great effect by Portia. They built up quite a rapport with the audience; I'm sure I wasn't the only one with a lump in the throat at the end.
I really, really recommend this wonderful piece of theatre. Go see it now! - Simon
17 Sep 07
The acting of the young newbie Flora Spencer-Longhurst was fantastic. She encapsulated a distressed, young, tomboyish adolescent girl to a tee. Coupled with the young impish lad alongside her they stole the show. Indeed the acting of Portia was wonderful but seeing the two "kids" working so well together really made my evening. Yes, some of the other acting was patchy at best, and the first "half" was overly long but it was a pleasure to watch such a wonderfully sweet and innocent tale, set within a backdrop of such climatic times, with the war raging in Europe and the struggle for Racial equality piquing at the established order in the US. - Lee Irvine
17 Sep 07
Another great night out at the Young Vic. Member of the Wedding was very enjoyable. A lovely period set is brought to life with excellent performances given by the whole cast especially the from Berenice and Frankie. - Roland
[TMA] member. 2004 - to close for an estimated 18 to 24 months to undergo an essential overhaul costing £12.5 million. Re-opened Oct. 2006 with the new auditoria named in honour of two theatre women, designer Maria Bjornson and director Clare Venables who died in 2002 and 2003 respectively. The Maria seats 160 while the Clare seats 80.
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